| Literature DB >> 35078243 |
Tony El Jabbour1, Maksym Misyura1, Darren Cowzer2, Michal Zimmermann3, Victoria Rimkunas4, Antonio Marra1, Fatemeh Derakhshan1, Pier Selenica1, Megan Parilla1, Jeremy S Setton5, Ozge Ceyhan-Birsoy1, Yelena Kemel2, Amanda Catchings2, Megha Ranganathan2, Geoffrey Y Ku2, Yelena Y Janjigian2, Michael Zinda4, Maria Koehler4, Zsofia Stadler2, Jinru Shia1, Jorge S Reis-Filho1, Diana Mandelker1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) adenocarcinoma is a rare cancer associated with poor prognosis. The genetic factors conferring predisposition to GEJ adenocarcinoma have yet to be identified.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35078243 PMCID: PMC9086803 DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djac024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Natl Cancer Inst ISSN: 0027-8874 Impact factor: 11.816
Figure 1.Prevalence and molecular characteristics of germline ATM-mutated gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) adenocarcinoma. A) Prevalence of pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P/LP) germline variants in ATM identified in a pan-cancer cohort: P values for multiple pairwise comparison were calculated using Pearson’s χ2 test with Benjamini-Hochberg correction yielding the following for each cancer type: pancreatic (P < .001), gastric (P = .01), biliary (P = .004), prostate (P < .001), breast (P < .001), bladder (P < .001), melanoma (P < .001), renal cell carcinoma (P < .001), colorectal (P < .001), esophageal adenocarcinoma (P = .02), ovarian (P < .001), glioma (P < .001), endometrial (P < .001), and esophageal squamous cell (P = .23). B) Landscape of recurrent (n ≥ 10) nonsynonymous somatic mutations in ATM P/LP germline variants (gATM-mut; n = 18) and germline ATM–wild-type cases (gATM-wt; n = 294) GEJ tumors detected by targeted Memorial Sloan Kettering Integrated Mutation Profiling of Actionable Cancer Targets (MSK-IMPACT) sequencing. The effects of the somatic alterations are color-coded according to the legend. Loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH) of the wild-type allele is displayed by diagonal bars. Bar charts (top) indicate the tumor purity for each sample. Phenobar (top) provides information about ATM germline status. Stacked barplots (bottom) show the fraction of different transitions or transversions in each sample colored according to the legend. The right bar refers to total counts of pathogenic alternation per gene. C) TP53 is more frequently mutated in gATM-wt than in gATM-mut GEJ adenocarcinomas. Only genes with more than 4 mutations in the samples from each group were included in the analysis. The statistical difference of the 2 groups was compared by 2-sided Fisher’s exact tests, corrected for multiple testing through the Benjamini-Hochberg method (P < .001). D) Comparison of mean number of single nucleotide variants (SNVs) between gATM-wt and gATM-mut GEJ adenocarcinomas. Plotted are the mean number of SNVs, with error bars indicating SDs. Statistical comparison was performed using 2-sided Wilcoxon-Mann–Whitney U test.
Summary of GEJ adenocarcinoma cases with germline P/LP ATM variants
| Case ID | Sex | Ethnicity | Age, y | ATM variant (NM_000051.4) | ATM variant type | 1st or 2nd degree relative with ATM-associated cancer | ACMG variant classification | Additional notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSK_GEJ_07 | Male | White | 61 | c.8418 + 5_8418 + 8delGTGA | Intronic deletion | No | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_08 | Male | White | 62 | c.8977C>T (p.Arg2993*) | Truncating SNV | Yes (pancreato-biliary, prostate and breast) | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_09 | Male | White | 66 | c.3802delG (p.Val1268*) | Truncating SNV | Yes (pancreato-biliary and breast) | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_10 | Male | Ashkenazi Jewish | 69 | c.1027_1030delGAAA (p.Glu343Ilefs*2) | Truncating frameshift | Yes (pancreato-biliary and breast) | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_11 | Male | South Asian | 43 | c.217_218delGA (p.Glu73Metfs*26) | Truncating frameshift | No | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_13 | Male | White | 50 | c.3894dupT (p.Ala1299Cysfs*3) | Truncating frameshift | Yes (prostate) | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_15 | Female | White | 58 | c.8147T>C (p.Val2716Ala) | Missense | No | Pathogenic | carrier of BARD1 (NM_000465) c.2300_2301delTG (p.Val767Aspfs*4) with no LOH detected by FACETS |
| MSK_GEJ_59 | Male | White | 69 | c.7327C>T (p.Arg2443*) | Truncating SNV | Yes (pancreato-biliary and breast) | Pathogenic | carrier of BRCA1 exon 12 duplication with no LOH detected by FACETS |
| MSK_GEJ_108 | Male | White | 62 | c.3154-2A>G | Essential splice site SNV | Yes (pancreato-biliary) | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_109 | Male | Ashkenazi Jewish | 65 | c.9022C>T (p.Arg3008Cys) | Missense | Yes (breast) | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_110 | Male | White | 48 | c.5932G>T (p.Glu1978*) | Truncating SNV | No | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_111 | Male | White | 44 | c.5228C>T (p.Thr1743Ile) | Missense | Yes (breast) | Likely pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_112 | Male | White | 74 | c.5712dupA (p.Ser1905Ilefs*25) | Truncating frameshift | No | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_113 | Male | White | 59 | c.1A>C (p.Met1?) | Start loss | Yes (prostate) | Likely pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_114 | Female | White | 35 | exons 17-63 deletion; | Multi-exon deletion | Yes (breast, pancreato-biliary, and prostate) | Pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_115 | Female | White | 67 | c.331 + 1G>A | Essential splice site SNV | No | Likely pathogenic | Personal history of cervical and parathyroid cancer |
| MSK_GEJ_116 | Female | White | 23 | c.6573–9G>A | Intronic SNV | Yes (pancreatic and prostate) | Likely pathogenic | NA |
| MSK_GEJ_117 | Female | White | 56 | 7638_7646delTAGAATTTC (p.Arg2547_Ser2549del) | In-frame deletion | Yes (breast) | Pathogenic | Personal history of breast cancer at 51 y |
FACETS = fraction and allele-specific copy number estimates from tumor sequencing; GEJ = gastroesophageal junction; LOH = loss of heterozygosity; P/LP = pathogenic or likely pathogenic; SNV = single nucleotide variant.
Figure 2.Immunohistochemical analysis of ATM expression in gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) adenocarcinomas. A–D) Representative micrographs of the hematoxylin-and-eosin (H&E) and ATM immunohistochemical assessment of 2 cases of ATM-mutated GEJ adenocarcinomas. Note the retention of the nuclear expression in the normal glands (marked by a) and the complete loss of nuclear expression in the malignant proliferating glands (marked by b). A, C) H&E, X40. B, D) ATM immunohistochemistry.
Figure 3.ATM and ATR short-interfering RNA (siRNA) silencing in gastroesophageal junction (GEJ), esophageal, and gastric adenocarcinoma cell lines. A-C) Representative immunoblots showing downregulation of ATM and ATR expression by their respective siRNAs in the indicated cell lines. Whole cell extracts were probed with the indicated antibodies, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) was used as a loading control. D-F) Quantification of viability of the indicated cell lines on downregulation of ATM, ATR, or both, suggesting synthetic lethality between ATM and ATR in the respective tissue backgrounds. Cells were transiently transfected with the indicated siRNAs, and viability was measured with a CellTiter Glo assay. Data represented as individual values from 3 and more independent biological replicates normalized to a non-targeting siRNA control (circles) with mean (bars) and the error bars represent the SD. P values were calculated with 1-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). All statistical tests were 2-sided.